Framework Laptop 16 upgrades and a preview of the OCuLink Dev Kit

We’re introducing the latest updates to Framework Laptop 16 today, bringing one piece haptic touchpad and one piece keyboard options, along with a new Bezel color and a Ryzen 5 processor configuration. We’re also previewing a new OCuLink Dev Kit that enables extremely high throughput peripherals like eGPUs. Framework Laptop 16 is truly the ultimate portable workstation platform, with the flexibility of a desktop PC in a thin, robust magnesium and aluminum 16" chassis. All of the new updates take in the feedback you’ve given us over the last two years to both extend on modularity and level up performance and refinement.

First, the Input Module system on Framework Laptop 16 enables a wild range of input combinations, including being able to choose between numpads and centered keyboards and select the touchpad alignment you want. One of the tradeoffs to enable this modularity though has been seams in the touchpad row. We’re happy to introduce a new One Piece Haptic Touchpad module that centers the touchpad in a single rigid CNC aluminum palmrest part. This is the same new haptic touchpad architecture we’re using in the Framework Laptop 13 Pro, with four piezo haptic elements and careful mechanical and firmware tuning to deliver excellent click feel. Click force and haptic feedback response force are both adjustable too.

To go along with the One Piece Haptic Touchpad, we also have a new One Piece Keyboard in US English, which keeps the same great key structure while making the top row of the Input Module system seamless too with an aluminum lattice part. Both of these modules are optional, which means you have the choice of just how much modularity you want. Both are now pre-orderable in Framework Laptop 16 configurations, with shipments starting this June.

Framework Laptop 16 is insanely customizable cosmetically too. From the start, you’ve been looking for more options there, and we’re excited to share that after years of testing different translucent plastic materials for both looks and reliability, we’re enabling a Translucent Smoke Gray Bezel. We were able to work with our supplier Mitac to bring in and color tune a brand new resin that is not only mechanically robust, but is actually 98% post-consumer-recycled material! This new Bezel option will be available in system configurations and the Framework Marketplace later this summer.

We have one other configuration update, which is that you can now order Framework Laptop 16 with a Ryzen 5 340 processor option, which enables a new, lower entry price. This is an option that many of our Framework for Business customers have been looking for to enable broader deployments to their teams. Ryzen 5 is available for pre-order today in both a pre-built configuration starting at $1,599 USD and a DIY Edition starting at $1,249 USD.

With Framework Laptop 16, we introduced one other novel module system, the Expansion Bay that enables upgradeable discrete Graphics Modules and other high-speed, high-power peripherals over an internal PCIe x8 interface. When we announced the Expansion Bay and open sourced documentation around it, we immediately saw interest from the community around OCuLink. This is an interface technology that allows bringing the internal PCIe out over a connector and cable to enable external peripherals like eGPUs without the overhead of Thunderbolt. We quickly saw interest turn into multiple community efforts to design OCuLink adapters. In parallel, we had been experimenting on our own with OCuLink.

Today, we’re happy to preview the results of those experiments, the OCuLink Dev Kit, which uses OCuLink 8i to enable external peripherals with up to 128 Gbps bidirectional throughput. As far as we know, this makes Framework Laptop 16 the first laptop to have an 8-lane OCuLink interface exposed.

There are three parts of the Dev Kit. First, the core of the kit is the OCuLink Adapter Board that drops into a Framework Laptop 16 Expansion Bay Shell and brings the PCIe interface to a connector on the rear of the laptop. Second, we’ve developed a Graphics Module OCuLink Dock that allows re-using Framework Laptop 16 Graphics Modules externally to the system at native performance. Finally, we have the PCIe OCuLink Dock that allows using standard off the shelf PCIe cards like graphics cards, 100Gbps network cards, video capture cards, and more with very little performance hit over using them in a desktop PC.

We designed this system as a kit, where we provide you with the core electronics, structure, and reference 3D-printable designs, and you can choose what to build around it. The GPU, the enclosure, the power supply, and the overall setup are all up to you. We’ll have more to share on the OCuLink Dev Kit as we get closer to shipping it later this year.

We’re excited to keep extending on the extreme modularity of Framework Laptop 16 and making this a portable workstation that you can own and modify at the deepest level.

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Pretty excited about the one-piece haptic touchpad! The touchpad on my Framework 16 frequently jams down, causing a continuous click. I have to detach and reattach the touchpad module to reset it. Hopefully the haptic one will resolve the issue.

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I’m excited about the one-piece touchpad as well. I’ve been on the fence about 3D printing one, but now that they have the official one I’ll wait.

I was hoping for a redesigned Expansion Bay shell that would accept some Expansion Cards too. I guess I’ll have to design that after all, I’ve been kicking around some ideas.

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I have only one issue with the one-piece touchpad module: there’s not an offset version for those of us who use the numpad or macropad. Apart from that, it’s a very nice option.

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This is a supported input module/touchpad combination, it means that one piece touchpad module should work with keyboard installed to the left and numpad to the right.

Yes, I know, but it doesn’t make much sense to me to have the touchpad centered when the keyboard is offset to the left because it seems to me that most people would have to try to work around the touchpad with their right hand when typing to avoid accidental touchpad input. I have my 16 set up with the numpad on the right, keyboard on the left, and the touchpad offset to the left because that’s what’s comfortable and doesn’t result in accidental touchpad input when typing while, y’know, resting my palms on the palmrest area, as is what that empty area is meant for.

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Question on the Framework 16 AI 5 340 CPU configuration. When selecting this CPU in the laptop configurator, the 5070 expansion bay is greyed out with a message “Not available with your other selected options”. Is this simply a limitation on ordering or is there a fundamental compatibility issue with the 5070 module and the AI 5 340 CPU?

I’m looking at this unit to buy without GPU module (initially) but will likely need CUDA capabilities at a later time. I’d hate to invest in the AI 5 340 option now just to find out a need a mainboard upgrade before I can grab the 5070 module.

when will the haptic touch pad be available for purchase? Or did it already sell out? I have been checking on the site all day but it acts like its out of stock, but finding it in the store it says ‘coming soon’??

I tried entering my email address to be notified when all three Framework 16 things (one piece touchpad, one piece keyboard, and OCuLink Dev Kit) become available, but I hit an error when I tried to click “Notify me” on the third one. I guess the server rate limited me or something :thinking:

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I wonder why there’s no “three piece” haptic touchpad?

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With this OCulink kit, could it be used to connect graphics module to a frame work 13?

Is there something out there that can take the OCulink connect to thunderbolt?

Sure but with how bulky that is there is little reason to use it over a much cheaper desktop gpu.

Imo the main reason to use an expansion bay as egpu is if you could make it super compact.

I have no idea about the hardware implications, but I would love an OCulink for the framework 13, it would be perfect to game at home and using the laptop only everywhere else

I’d also quite like if they made the unused pcie lanes available somehow.

Usb4 does work quite well for egpus though, especially with actual usb4 or tb5 based enclosures that that can use the full 40Gbit of the usb4 link.

Well the reason is that I have both the FW13 and unused gpu module as I upgraded to the 5070.

So just looking for ways to use the hw I got :slight_smile:

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Best guess (and just that, a guess) is we may be able to order the haptic touch pad by itself and drop into our existing 3 piece?

I expect the mounting to be different between those, making them incompatible with 3-piece, might be wrong, though, yeah. Would be nice :slight_smile:

A palm rest without sharp, jagged seams will be nice.

I am disappointed there isn’t a single piece keyboard w/ numpad yet, needing to adjust the backlight brightness separately between the two sucks.

Ya it’s annoying. I’d alao like my num pad to be RGB like the rest of my keyboard.

Unfortunately, unless you guys include a horizontally offset variant of the one piece haptic touchpad module, those of us who have num pads will have to either settle with the touchpad being placed awkwardly (not feasible for me) or pass on the one piece module altogether.

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